The Patriot Act and Attention Deficit Democracy
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
The American
political system failed when Congress and the media recently rolled
over in favor of extending the most onerous provisions of the USA
PATRIOT Act. Despite stark evidence of both the laws abuses
and widespread popular opposition, Bush got a rubber-stamp extension
of a law that has come to symbolize boundless government intrusions
since 9/11.
The reenactment
of the Patriot Act symbolizes how America is becoming an attention
deficit democracy characterized by pervasive negligence
and ignorance throughout society and much of the government. Most
Americans appear to no longer care whether there is any leash on
government power.
Many Americans
did try to stop this juggernaut. More than 400 cities and communities
have passed resolutions condemning or opposing the Patriot Act.
Yet Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.), an opponent of the bill, perfectly
captured what Congress did: What we are seeing is quite simply
a capitulation to the intransigent and misleading rhetoric of a
White House that sees any effort to protect civil liberties as a
sign of weakness.
The Founding
Fathers intended Congress to be a vigorous check on and balance
to executive power. But Congress has never done anything more than
concoct fig leafs for itself in response to public outrage over
the Patriot Act. In late 2004, Congress mandated the creation of
the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board. But the board is
totally controlled by the branch of government committing the abuses.
The president appoints all five board members, and the board is
located in the White House. Bush dallied before announcing his picks,
and then appointed as chairman the former co-chair of Lawyers for
Bush-Cheney. The board never bothered to hold a single meeting.
With the Patriot
Act renewal, Congress made what Senate Judiciary Committee chairman
Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) described as cosmetic changes
and then congratulated themselves for defending civil liberties.
With the revised
Patriot Act, it will be more difficult for the feds to seize public
library records with a Section 215 search warrant (approved by the
secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court). But the feds
will still be able to seize library records by invoking other provisions
in the law.
Businesses,
nonprofit groups, and other organizations hit by Section 215 search
warrants are prohibited from disclosing that they have been compelled
to surrender customers information and other data to the feds.
The new, improved Patriot Act will allow individuals and organizations
hit by such searches to publicly complain about the intrusion
but only after they wait a year after they have been searched, and
only if they can persuade a federal judge that the G-men acted in
bad faith. A 365-day waiting period is Congresss notion of
due process and fair play for American citizens.
The biggest
Patriot Act bombshell of recent times detonated last November when
the Washington Post revealed that the FBI is issuing
30,000 National Security Letters (NSLs) a year. The Patriot Act
made it far easier for the FBI to use NSLs to compel private citizens,
banks, nonprofits, and other entities to surrender information upon
demand. These subpoenas, like Section 215 searches, are accompanied
by a gag order: Anyone who discloses receiving such a letter
can be sent to prison. FBI field offices issue NSLs on their own
in cases that they claim involve international terrorism or clandestine
intelligence activities.
NSLs
empower the FBI to seize records on peoples earning, spending,
travels, web searches, emails, and telephone calls. Each NSL can
lasso the records of thousands of people. Federal judge Victor Marrero
ruled that the Patriot Acts NSL provision has the effect
of authorizing coercive searches effectively immune from any judicial
process. (The Bush administration is appealing the ruling).
The
White House hyped the Patriot Act renewal as a political triumph.
The Associated Press reported, Republicans declared victory
as they sought to polish their national security credentials this
midterm election year. Republicans prattled on about how the
revised Patriot Act provides safeguards. Apparently,
a safeguard is anything that a government official can
mention when asked about possible abuses of federal powers.
If enough
Americans comprehend this patriot charade, it will become
far more difficult for the White House and Congress to pull off
similar infringements on freedom in the future. At the very least,
citizens can still make it hot for anyone in Washington who betrays
his oath to uphold the Constitution.
March
23, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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